Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 47, Number 102, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 22 May 1945 — Page 4
PXGE FOUK '
SULUVAN DAILY TIMES-TUESDAY, MAY 22, 1945.
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0HE; OF; THESE NEIGHBORS ViU CALL ON YOU GIVE YOUR SUPPORT!
JEFFERSON TOWNSHIP Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Pfrang, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Henderson, Mr. aiid
Mrs. Charles Spencer, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles James, Mr. and Mrs.
Russel Quick, Carl Jackson, Mrs.
Jack Arnold, Mr, and Mrs. Russell
Berry, Mr. and Mrs. Hubert BeiiT nett, Mr. and Mrs. Homer Bene fieL, Mr. and Mrs. Rusi. fcnochs, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Bedwell, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Browning, Lacy Smith, Mrs. Forest Cleveland, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Goodman, Mr, and Mrs. Don Pahmeicr, Mr. and Mrs. Clovis Booker, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Robbing, Mr. and Mrs. Max Robbing, and Mr. and Mrs. T. L.i Meier.
Denver Drake, Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Thomas, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wernz, Mr. and Mrs. Burkie Drake, Mr. and Mrs. Noah Scott, Mr. and Mrs. Will Kimmel, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Drake, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Chowning, Mr. and Mrs.
Ray M. Drake, Mr,
Memorial Address Honoring Heroic Dead At Iwo Jim
(Following is the memorial ad- ,men -and poor, together. lb
and Mrs. 'dress delivered by a Chaplain on 'are Protestants! Catholics a
Dennis Tillman, Mr. and Mrs. Iwo Jima Island at the dedica-
Earl Gaston, Mr. and Mrs. Dan tion of an American cemetery in Hurst, Mrs. George Harmon, Mr. ; which lie buried the hundreds of
Zclva Drake, Gus ; brave Americau who died in the
Jews, together. Here no mi prefers another because of if faith or despises him because j his color. Here there are i quotas of. how many from ea' group are admitted or allowt
Among these men there is
and Mrs.
Chowning, Mrs. Mary Harvey, bloody fighting that wrested the Denny . Thompson and Edalee j strategic island from the JapaShoemaker. nese. A copy of the memorial ad-
TURMAN TOWNSHIP Mr. dress, was sent to Mr. and Mrs. discrimination. No prejudic j and Mrs. Clarence Walters, Mr. I Marion Padgett of this city by i No hatred. Theirs is the hielnJ
! and Mrs. George Howk, Mr. and 1 their son, Pfc. Leland Padgett of ' and purest democracy. Mrs. Frank Patton, Mr. and Mrs. 'the U. S. Marine Corps. Pfc. Pad- i Any man among us the livil
Leo Phillips, Mr. and Mrs. Frank' gett fought through the Iwo Jima who fails to understand that w Badger, Mr. and Mrs. William ' campaign and more recently has thereby betray those who.,!
Boles, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Weir, Mr. been in a hospital for a tonsilecand Mrs. Jess Canary. Mr. and, tomy. He is now believed to have
Mrs. Dana Pigg, Mr. and Mrs. Emerson Watson, Mr. and Mrs, James Kinnell, Mr. and Mrs,
Herb Burton, Mr. and Mrs. James
here dead. Whoever of us li his hand against a brother, thinks himself superior to tin who happen to be in the mino.i ty, makes , of this ceremony ai of the bloody sacrifice it coi munorates, an emoty. lull'
and and and
if
J
Oomet'me during the next few Jays you'Jl open. your door... or look n fcom work in the lieid . . . and see a face you probably know well. It will be the. face bf one neighbor. But in reality your caller wUl be.yoiir 138,000.60 neighbors throughout America. Neighbors inviting you to join jeni in puling the ityghty 7th War Loan over , . , in a mighty big way! . "Will you buy a War Bond?" ; ' The revues: May be that simple. But you'll know the earnest hope behind ie ..."Do your part, neighbor! ...I'm doing mine, and giving fresly of my time to mai;c the mighty 7th War Low a success! ' Now, the need is greater than ever . . . for, j . . . ' .
weapons, for planes, for tanks, &r food . . . and , for War Ponds to keep th,?m moving to our front lines. D'g down deeper! Evety day in the news headlines you see and hear reasons for in'jesting as much in bonds as you possibly can. Join the 7th War Bond Drive with every idle dollar wjien your neighbor calls , , . let's get the war over ivitb! TRADE YOUR FOLDING MONEY FOR FIGHTING MONEY
MIL
WAR BONDS FAY OFF, IN THESC 7 WAYS... The same Governmen t secur ry backs yewr Waf Bonds as backi the actual dollars you put into them. 9 You gee $U)0 at maturity for eveiy f 75 laonci new. 0 You catt get your money back, 60 days after issue, date, any time you need it.. .in fhe meantime yba get safety and steady; growth. You have a bacHog to renew farta buildings and equipment after the war. C Bonds will insure your chil " dren's schooling, or provide for your own security, travel, retirement. Bonds go into a national nest egg that will help to dssur post-war prosperity. 1 Bonds transform your love df home and country into action . . . you join personally in the brggst, most urgent War Loaa f all the eva&(
FARM M I
REAU Cllf.- SPIIR (HIl CO.
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fill
1 1. RIGGS $, m IIIIE
nil IICH HIE CHEVROLET SALES
ICE
& Bilfflf WE
LIS & 111
THEATRES
ON FEED &
SUPPLY CO.-' THE FASHION HOP
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GILL TOWNSHIP Mr. Mrs. Luther Phcgley, Mr. Mrs. Russell Pheglcy, Mr.
Mrs. Jason Phegley, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Harris, Gault Pleasant, Mrs. Effie Cooper, Mr. and Mrs. Billy Ferd Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Hosea J. Siner, Mr. and Mrs. Charles 'Ladd. Jr., C. D. Red Foyd, Mrs. Riley Pirtle, Mr. and Mrs. Francis McKain, Mr. and Mrs. William Scott, Mr. and Mrs. Homer Christy, Mr. and "Mrs. Henry Raines, Mr. and Mrs. O. R. Willard, Mr.' and Mrs. Carl Nash, Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Sims, Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm Hart and Mr. and Mrs. Morris Ungcr. JACKSON TOWNSHIP Mr. and Mrs. Tom Brunker, Mr. and Mrs. Vess Mahan, Gus Mahan, Mrs. Delma Bridwell, Mr. and Mrs. Homer Davis, Mrs. Callie Wilson, Earl Quick, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wheat, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Lyons, Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Barnelt, Mrs. Donna' Souliers, Mr. and Mrs. Tip Tipton, Mr. and Mrs. Leland Everly, Mr. and Mrs. John Fox, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Marshall, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Cuest, Mr. and Mrs. James W. Peterson, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis B. Wells, Mr. and Mrs. Lyman Gordon, Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Mahan, ; Mr. and Mrs. Porter Campbell and Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert McBride. HAMILTON TOWNSHIP liar- i old Clark, Cozy Hayes, Mr. and j Mrs. Elza Douglass, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hadar, Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Downen. Mr. and Mrs. Ro.scoe Flynn, Mr, and Mrs. W. II. Everhart, Mrs. Zoe. Cummins, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Scott, Harold Downs, Mrs. Malcolm Campbell, Mrs. Leone Gettinger, Mrs. Perry Carpenter, Mrs. Cleo Woodard, Mrs. Roy Whitleck. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Dodd, Mrs. John P. Curry, Mrs. Hugh "Pete" McCrcery, Mr.and Mrs. Allan Coulson, Mr. and Mrs. Hinkle Graham, Bill Dodds.. Mrs. Ruth Alsop, Mr.- and Mrs. Claude Robbins, Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Goodman, Paid Phillips; Otto Gorby. Mr. and Mrs. Perry. Wilson and Jaines Thomas.
HADDON TOWNSHIP Mr. ! and Mrs. Loyd Wolfe, Mr. and Mrs. Walstine Queen, Mr. and Mrs. Chancey Lamb, John Knotls, Marguerite Combs, Herman Solsi.ian, Jesse Knotts, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Latshaw, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Snyder, Mr. and Mrs. Walker L. Nash, Frank Davidson, Mrs. Ira Woodward, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Whitloek. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Lovelace, Mr. and Mrs. John Hargis, Paul Lisman, Maxine Gore, Martin Collins, Blanche Hoke, Mr. and Mrs. Don Burroughs. Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Robert
son, Mervin Howard, Eleanor Nie-'
wald, Floyd Horton, Laura Boone, Pleasant Shake, Susan Campbell, Est el Shelf ler. Glen Gobin , Mrs.
Cecil Barker, Mr. and Mrs. Dewey McKinley, Guy Wolfe. Mrs. Bcrnice Secvcrs, Mr. and Mrs. Flnyd Evans, Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Mc- ( 'amnion, Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Pigi;. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Mason, Mr. and Mrs. Roy McCammon, Miss Maude Daugherty, Mrs. O. L. Somrrs. Mrs, Lillic Ladson, Mrs. Charles Dugan and Mrs. Bessie Dailey.
FAIRBANKS TOWNSHIP Mr.
and Mrs. Clcbert Kcst.er. Mr. and Mrs. Clevva O. Drake, Mr. and
Mrs. Scott Fuller, Mr
returned to duty somewhere in the Facific theater of war.) This is perhaps the grimmest, and surely the holiest task we
Monroe. Mr. and Mrs. John Gray have faced since D-Day. Here
1 - . ! ) . - 1VIT- 3 AT I ,1 T .-. 1- U.r....n 1 '. 4l.n t 1 J C I FT. 1 ! .,
rwtuy, anu mis. uuiuuu muun, i unuic ua nc wit uuuica vi uuni- iiiuuKci y. lu mis, men, as o Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Osborn ' rades and friends. Men who until ' solemn, sacred duty, do we t Mr. and Mrs. Max Woodard, Mr.1 yesterday or last week laughed living now dedicate ourselves: and Mrs. Harry Brown, Mr. and1 with us, joked with us, trained (to the right of Protestants, C Mrs. Carl Ferree, Mr. and Mrs. j with us. Men who were on the(tholics and Jews, of white nv Walter Steele, Mr. and Mrs. Paul i same ships with us, and went and Negroes alike, to enjoy 1 Unger, Mr. and Mrs. Manford over the sides with us as we pre- I democracy for which all of the
Church, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Lund,1 pared to hit the beaches of this Mr. and Mrs. David Huff, Mr. and island. Men who fought with us Mrs. Walter Whitman, Mr. and and feared with us. Somewhere Mrs. George Coffman, Mr. and in this plot of ground there may Mrs. Elihu Huff, Mr. and Mrs. lie the man who could have dis-
j Floyd Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. Nor- covered the cure for cancer. Un
man wukcy, Mrs. uaipn uoiiier, ocr one ot tnese Christian cross-
Junior Foutz, T. M. Durham, Edna es, or beneath a Jewish Star of j men, that victory 6n the battl'l
Edwards, Mrs. Joe Duffer, Paul David, there may rest now a field will automatically guara: Wible and Mrs. Lawrence Huff. man who was destined to be a tee the triumph of democracy j CURRY TOWNSHIP Mr. and great prophet to find the way, home. This war, with all i Mrs. Clair Thompson, Mr. and perhaps, for ajl to live in plenty, j frightful heartache and sut'fcriir Mrs. Lucius Caton, Fred Vangild- with poverty and hardship for ! is but the beginning of our gei ev, Mrs. James Lovelace, Joseph none. Now they lie here silently : cration's struggle for demoerar Branson, Mrs. Edward Kelley, in this sacred soil, and we gather When the last battle has be
Mrs. Walter E. Sparks, Roy Jew- to consecrate this earth in their eil, Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Sluder, memory.. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Jennings, It is not easy to do so. Some Mrs. Oral Harris, Herman Goble, of us have, buried closest friends Mr. and Mrs. Ross Marts, Mr. and here. We Saw these men killed Mrs. Otto Jewell, Mr. and Mrs. before our Very eyes. Any one Ferd Hall, Mr. and Mrs. James H. of us might Miave died in their
nazeirjgg, mv. ana Mrs. ivnio places, indeed, some of us are I Flesher, Emery Benson, Harold alive and breathing at this1 mo-
have here paid the price.
To one thing more do we co1 secrate ourselves in memory those who sleep beneath the crosses and stars. We shall n
foolishly suppose, as did the li generation of America's fighti
won, there will be those at homj
a mure were last lime, wno wi want us to turn our backs i selfish isolation on the rest
organized humanity, and thu ; sabotage ' the very peace f
which we fight. We promise yJ
who lie here: we will not that We will joiii hands
r ; 1T J TT.. T : T 11 . ,. . .... ( ..:.. .i . n
ni'u mi. vi jewcu, mew oniy oecause men wno lie dhuihi, cnina, nussia in. pcac
iiomer sturgeon, Mr. and Mrs. here beneath us had the courage jeven as we have in war, to bui James Blubaugh, Charles McGar-, and strength to give their lives I the kind of world for which yi vey, Mr. and Mrs. L. V. Martin, for ours. To speak in memory of j died.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Pirtle, Mr. such men as these is . not easy, and Mrs. George McCrocklin, Cf them too can it be said with Willard Miller, Gorse Lovelace, utter truth: "The world will Mrs. William Davidson, Joe little note nor long remember Mitchell, Mrs. Roy Thomas, Her- what we say here. It can .never shell Hall, Mr. and Mrs. Claude forget what they did here." W alters, Mrs. Grace Marts, Mrs. No, our poor power df speech. Edith Scott, Emory McCleary, can "add nothing to wlVat these Hazel Allan, Mrs. Larce Walton men and . the other "dead of our
and Frank L. McLancy.
To the People , of this Community
The best way to observe the defeat of Hitler is to buy an cstra War Bond. In thousands upon' thousands of American , homes to- ,
day mere is . p r i d e and ' sadness: from these I homes have j come our . fighting 1 men who died to, bring us this far on 1 the road 1o I decisive vietory over all
LJT till) WA-::
Division who are not here' have I already done. All that we even hope to do is follow their example. To show the same selfless , courage in peace that they didjn war. To swear that by the grace of God and the stubborn strength and power of human will, their sons and ours shall never suffer these pains again. These men have done their job well.' They have paid the ghastly price of freedom. If that freedom be once' again lost,1 as it was after the last war, the unforgivable blame will be ours, not theirs. So it is we the living who are here to be dedicated and consecrated. We dedicate ourselves, first, to
i It will take more sweat, more i live together in peace the way tears, more toil, more and great- i tiev fought and are buried in
' er individual war cpumu uuus j
before we see japan in uik iui" r these barbarians of the Pacific planned for us. How much more blood and tears depends on every individual American war worker and bund buyer. . Today should be a day of rv consecration to fie task before u- Whether v:e call today X-Dav or V-E Day. it is only a long step toward iru? V-Day. THE EDITOn
When the last shot has bci fired, there will still be thJ
whose eyes are turned backwai
not forward, who will be sati
fied with those wide extrcn of poverty and wealth in' whli 1 .... .i
mc eetus oi tfrtmner war c
breed.. Wc promise you, our d
parted comrades: this too we w rot permit. This war has be fought by the common man:
fruits of peace must be enjoy! by the common man! We pr misc, by all that is sacred ai holy, that your sons the sons miners and millers, the sons farmers and workers, , will i herit from your death the ric
to a living that is decent secure.
ai
. When the final cross has beplaced in the last cemetery, on again there will be those whom profit is more importa than peace, who will insist wi f li O imiA tf rii.n.i ...... 1 I
and anoeasement that it U hoiiS
to trade with the enemies mankind than, by crushing the
io lose tneir profit. To vou wl
this war. Here lie men who sleep here silently, we give o Invert America because their an-'promise: we will not listen! V
cestors generations ago helped ! will not forget that some of yi
in her founding, and otner men c uurrn wnn on mat caii
who loved Tier with equal from American wells, that ma
passion because they themselves ot you were killed by shel
or their own fathers escaped .fashioned from American ste' from oppression to her blessed! We promise that when o,n shores. Here He officers' and again men seek profit at yo men, Negroes and whites, rich expense, . wc shall remeinb j now yu. looked when we plac
XSY BOXDS TODAY?
Br Grade Allen
and George Burns r Illustrated by Ed Reed
yvu reverently, lovingly, in ground.
and Mrs.
1113 Is au official U.S. lieasuiy sdvei lisement prepared under auspices of Treasury Drpartiaeut and War Advertising Counril
I S WM XV JAKES;
ad bought a War Boikdr
Thus do we memorialize thoj who, having ceased living wil us, now live within us. Thus we consecrate ourselves the lbi lng to carry on the struggle thJ began. Too much bhyjd has goil
i into this soil for us to let it Ij barren. Too- much pain nil heartache have fertilized ti'
earth on which we stand. Vi here solemnly swear: this sh;i
! not be in vain! Out of this, aij
from the suffering and sorrow
those' who mourn-this, will coiil
e promise the birth of
new freedom for the sons men everywhere. Amen.
FACTO GRAPHS
The nick in men's coat collar1
dates from the 17th century. T:
tops of men's coats were cut . that they could be fastened u
around the neck, and the 1 shaped nick; in modern coats a survival of that custom, .
King of Beggars was a tit given to Bampfyide Moore Ca rew, a noted English vagabor
a the early 18th century. .
' The ; sun sends out 400,0( times aa much light as the moil and 90 million times aa much a
